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The Serial Killers Apprentice The True Story Of How Houstons Deadliest Murderer Turned A Kid Into A Killing Machine Katherine Ramsland

  • SKU: BELL-56697050
The Serial Killers Apprentice The True Story Of How Houstons Deadliest Murderer Turned A Kid Into A Killing Machine Katherine Ramsland
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Serial Killers Apprentice The True Story Of How Houstons Deadliest Murderer Turned A Kid Into A Killing Machine Katherine Ramsland instant download after payment.

Publisher: Crime Ink
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 25.53 MB
Pages: 336
Author: Katherine Ramsland, Tracy Ullman
ISBN: 9781613164952, 1613164955
Language: English
Year: 2024

Product desciption

The Serial Killers Apprentice The True Story Of How Houstons Deadliest Murderer Turned A Kid Into A Killing Machine Katherine Ramsland by Katherine Ramsland, Tracy Ullman 9781613164952, 1613164955 instant download after payment.

A psychological examination of the blurred line between victim and accomplice―and how a killer can be created
Elmer Wayne Henley, Jr. was only fourteen when he first became entangled with serial rapist and murderer Dean Corll in 1971. Fellow Houston, Texas, teenager David Brooks had already been ensnared by the charming older man, bribed with cash to help lure boys to Corll’s home. When Henley unwittingly entered the trap, Corll evidently sensed he’d be of more use as a second accomplice than another victim. He baited Henley with the same deal he’d given Brooks: $200 for each boy they could bring him.
Henley didn’t understand the full extent of what he had signed up for at first. But once he started, Corll convinced him that he had crossed the line of no return and had to not only procure boys but help kill them and dispose of the bodies, as well. When Henley first took a life, he lost his moral base. He felt doomed. By the time he was seventeen, he’d helped with multiple murders and believed he’d be killed, too. But on August 8, 1973, he picked up a gun and shot Corll. When he turned himself in, Henley showed police where he and Brooks had buried Corll’s victims in mass graves. Twenty-eight bodies were recovered―most of them boys from Henley’s neighborhood―making this the worst case of serial murder in America at the time. The case reveals gross failures in the way cops handled parents’ pleas to look for their missing sons and how law enforcement possibly protected a larger conspiracy.
The Serial Killer’s Apprentice tells the story of Corll and his accomplices in its fullest form to date. It also explores the concept of “mur-dar” (the predator’s instinct for exploitable kids), current neuroscience about adolescent brain vulnerabilities, the role of compartmentalization, the dynamic of a murder apprenticeship, and how tales like Henley’s can aid with early intervention. Despite his youth and cooperation, Henley went to trial and received six life sentences. He’s now

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